It's BPX because it was written for the benefit of Unix users, although in 
practice it's used a lot outside of Unix. There is no dub.

OTOH, if you allocate a path then you probably will want to open it, and that 
will cause dubbing.


--
Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz
http://mason.gmu.edu/~smetz3

________________________________________
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [[email protected]] on behalf of 
Kirk Wolf [[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, April 13, 2020 1:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Any shop use UNIX in a production job?

I could be wrong, but I don't believe that BPXWDYN actually uses Unix
syscalls or would cause the AS to be dubbed.    I think that the BPX prefix
is a little misleading.   Ask on mvs-oe and you might get a definite answer
from the developer.

Kirk Wolf
Dovetailed Technologies
http://secure-web.cisco.com/1h_Ri43f0kXYLJq80d4Kd4Sxf8fcUWlpkdjQnCmP8ppTgV-f4vYvQ8manylF4QmBI1gR6n6qDE1kLs6XZYeYHz0FvbjsZ4RFz7GcYVoSJc5Wd-3THmfRJ-9bTGN_YTLMAzqmY4JLXkKcMnbO21ghNIJhhb3TkbmaEFDi3uu1R6Ltx18fe5p0u9q4T2B62iBxTxErnGFYiOqwH4VWAkJQyu83J46c4b_F5l5e7wbF-7H41mfCtzqhc8mweSsDyP9yJjys4is-T_iBSw2dJfq2HEEe9XIzct0LItiqN994QClc-bEo8agTLRvDKUR34Kt4t8cpFZ0F54-fYK2gj66aHIjnBVvh440s2T2Kcae27HgH_xcFDZ1UGukmc13KeN7aqlipew6PV9jWJy6ol8nVDoAokX5T6QKTuUAvdrWJtO2WNxfGUoQ_8ujIr95aWhmnA/http%3A%2F%2Fdovetail.com


On Mon, Apr 13, 2020 at 10:31 AM Steve Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:

> What about BPXWDYN from COBOL?
>
> I know this is being done.
>
> And I know of another using BPXWDY2 that will be production in the near
> future (alias entry to BPXWDYN).
>
> Sent from my iPhone — small keyboarf, fat fungrs, stupd spell manglr.
> Expct mistaks
>
>
> > On Apr 13, 2020, at 11:22 AM, John McKown <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> > On Mon, Apr 13, 2020 at 9:48 AM Kirk Wolf <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> >> Do you mean -
> >>
> >> - using z/OS Unix syscalls?
> >>
> >
> > Yes. Such as a COBOL program doing a CALL to BPX1SLP to "sleep" for a
> > while. No, I don't know why they would use that example, I just chose it.
> >
> >
> >
> >> - using the z/OS Unix file system?
> >>
> >
> > Yes to all. Saving & reading data in UNIX files vs legacy datasets.
> > Excluding "temporary" data going in fro "somewhere and then copied to a
> > legacy DSN for actual use. As an example uses PATH= in Production JCL.
> for
> > application generated and processed data.
> >
> >
> >
> >> - using the z/OS Unix shell?
> >>
> >
> > Yes, such as using awk to read a report data set (cp -T "//'some.dsn'"
> > /dev/fd1 | awk ... | cp -T /dev/fd0 "//'another.dsn'""
> >
> >
> >
> >>
> >> FWIW - I contend that there is no such thing as "running under Unix" on
> >> z/OS.  All please discuss :-)
> >>
> >>
> > --
> > People in sleeping bags are the soft tacos of the bear world.
> > Maranatha! <><
> > John McKown
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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> > send email to [email protected] with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN
>
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